“…Our choice of the term PAC was based on the limited neuroanatomical evidence (e.g., Lashley, 1941; and limited neurobehavioral evidence concerning the effects of small lesions in this .egion upon behavior (Boyd & Thomas, 1977;Thomas & Weir, 1975) av~ilable at the time. These studies, along with studies in other laboratories (e.g., Thompson, Huestis, Crinella, & Yu, 1986;Thompson & Yu, 1985), showed that bilateral PAC lesions resulted in disturbed spatial learning in a variety of mazes (e.g., Hebb-Williams, Lashley III mazes) or mazelike (e.g., Y-or T-maze spatial position reversal and spatial alternation; Kolb et aI., 1983;McDaniel, Davall, & Waters, 1989; tasks. Recently, the influences of similar lesions have been extended to the Maier 3-table task (Thinus-Blanc, Save, Poucet, & Foreman, 1996).…”